Nearly 150 people in the East are waiting for a kidney transplant
The number of transplants dropped dramatically during the pandemic
With kidney transplants dropping by a third during the pandemic, its more important than ever for people in Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex to tell their loved ones their donation decision.
That's according to NHS Blood and Transplant who are making the appeal as part of World Kidney Day today.
Thousands of patients are waiting for a kidney in the UK, with 20 of those in Norfolk, 23 in Suffolk and 103 in Essex.
The NHS says kidney transplants have been the hardest hit area of organ transplantation throughout the pandemic, with deceased donor transplants down 22% and living donor transplants down 60% - an overall drop in kidney transplants of 32% in 2020/21, compared to 2019/2020.
This means around 1,100 fewer patients received a kidney transplant in 2020/21, compared to the year before. In living donor transplantation, 422 patients benefitted instead of the usual 1,000 and there were 500 fewer deceased donor transplants.
Sadly, the thousands of people waiting for a kidney transplant may end up waiting longer for a deceased or living kidney donor as they’ve been unable to have a transplant for most of the pandemic and the waiting list has increased.
Living donor transplantation opens up opportunities for patients wating for a kidney transplant by minimising the time people need to rely on dialysis and by offering patients who wait the longest i.e. those who are most difficult to match, are particularly ‘sensitised’ (which means they have higher levels of antibodies which could cause their body to reject a transplanted organ) or are from a Black, Asian or minority ethnic background, the chance of a successful transplant.
People can donate a kidney in life to a particular individual (a relative, friend or someone they know who is in need of a transplant) or choose to donate anonymously where their kidney will either go to a high priority patient on the transplant list or create a chain of transplants via the UK living kidney sharing scheme.
Living donation is not for everyone and some people are not suitable donors, so the majority of kidney patients will still be saved by a deceased organ donor.
Even though the law around organ donation has now changed to an opt out system across England, Wales, and Scotland, many people are still not aware that families will still always be consulted before organ donation goes ahead.
Anthony Clarkson, Director of Organ and Tissue Donation and Transplantation, at NHS Blood and Transplant, says: “We know the pandemic is a very worrying time for kidney patients as thousands of people, including 20 patients in Norfolk, wait for a life-changing kidney transplant.
“We’re pleased that transplant activity is now recovering and we’re doing everything we can to enable as many transplants as possible to take place as quickly as possible.
“Sadly patients are facing a longer wait and more people need a kidney transplant, so it is more important than ever for people in Norfolk to share their organ donation decision with their family to help others after their death. And if anyone in Norfolk is willing to consider living kidney donation, they can find out more on our website.”